Dragonlance Adventures at DMs Guild wrote:Dragonlance Adventures (1e)
From Wizards of the Coast

At last, the complete Krynn source book that contains all the information necessary for limitless campaigning in the world of the DragonLance saga!

Provides all-new information on the character classes, races, artifacts, and powers that are unique to the fascinating world of Krynn.

The PoD version is $17.99 USD + shipping (£14.44 + shipping in the UK), but if you would prefer to buy the original TSR version (with a loose tri-fold cover) the Dragonlance Advntures article on the Book-House on The Piazza* can help you find Amazon deals. And in the case of this book, the Print on Demand book is actually more expensive than the second hand copies available as I post this! (The Book-House also has product information links and reviews that can help you make a purchasing decision.)

* = The Book-House on The Piazza uses affiliate links that mean that Amazon and DMs Guild/DriveThru/RPG Now pay a bounty to The Piazza that goes towards the hosting costs of The Piazza. So if you like using this forum, you can shop via the Book-House links to support it (at no cost to yourself).

What Dragonlance product would you like to see return to print via Print on Demand next?

Maybe not the best deal in the world considering how many affordable second hand copies there are floating around, but I'm just excited about the fact that this monumentally important D&D setting is back in print, in a sense, and I'm also curious about the quality of these POD products.

I'm personally hoping the Tales of the Lance boxed set will be added soon, with a POD option (even the pdf is STILL not on the dmsguild =\), which was my go-to Dragonlance product growing up, and a product that I still feel is bursting with charm in spite of its numerous inconsistencies. Time of the Dragon was also a fantastic (although unfortunately underdeveloped) setting that I would buy as a hardcover/softcover book in a heartbeat.

It would also be great if some of the excellent 3.5 era Margaret Weis Productions products were made available for POD. Especially Towers of High Sorcery, which was extreme difficult to get a hold on in Europe when it first came out, and tends to be REALLY pricey second hand on eBay. The Age of Mortals adventure path by Chris Coyle and Cam Banks was also excellent.

And since WotC also uses the dmsguild for the distribution of comic books, what's stopping them from using it to distribute Dragonlance novels? This was after all the main way the product line was developed after about 1996, and WotC has slowly been letting even some of the better known Dragonlance novels go out of print. Give me my novels, dammit!